The poet’s complaint is not about the beauty of the landscape being spoilt but about the trust of the poor people being betrayed.

The ruling party has not kept the promise they made to the poor people.

Stanza-2

The poet says that the govt. is planning to help the poor settle in villages close to the city, and all their needs would be taken care of but it is a false promise. They are “greedy good-doers” who outwardly proclaim to help the poor but indeed exploit them with calculations for their benefit. The poet finds it difficult to tolerate that the poor people still cherish a hope. At every roadside stand, he finds sadness, a prolonged wait for the rich to stop and buy things. Of all the traffic that passes by a few may stop for these:

To enquire the price

To reverse the vehicle

To ask the way

To ask for a gallon of gas

Stanza-3&4

The polished traffic are selfish and the poet says that they should not disturb the poor any more like the politicians by giving them false hopes and promises. They should put an end to it at once. The poem ends with a note of hope where the poet says that next time he could find the poor in a position to help others in trouble.